This week, join fellow art lovers at the Henry Art Gallery for new spring exhibits, watch as The Motherboard Suite brings to life music, and much more.

March 31, 7:00 – 9:00 PM | Henry Art Gallery
New art is waiting to be enjoyed at the Henry Art Gallery. Join in celebration of the Henry’s latest exhibitions: Sarah Cain: Day after day on this beautiful stage and Taking Care: Collection Support Studio. Thick as Mud will also be on view. Enjoy the new art installations, drinks, and music with fellow art lovers.
Free |
March 31, 12:30 – 1:30 PM | Parrington Hall and Zoom
Examine the changing impact of COVID infection on infant health, through which the pandemic could have lasting intergenerational effects. The SARS virus responsible for the COVID-19 disease has taken a large toll on population health including mortality, morbidity, and long-term disability. Over time the impact of the virus has evolved, as new variants have emerged and vaccines and therapeutic alternatives have become available.
Learn how researchers used unique population-level data, universal information on maternal infection during pregnancy, and a siblings-fixed-effects approach, to find a large impact of maternal COVID infection on several measures of infant health. These findings highlight the need to monitor the changing consequences of COVID infection over time and the importance of vaccination to reduce the burden of infection on vulnerable populations.
Free |

April 1, 8:00 PM | Meany Hall
The West Coast premiere of The Motherboard Suite brings to life a suite of music by musician, poet, actor Saul Williams. Directed by Bill T. Jones, this non-linear work is performed by Saul and his musical collaborators, and features seven choreographers 鈥 Maria Bauman, Kayla Farrish, Marjani Fort茅-Saunders, d. Sabela grimes, Jasmine Hearn, Shamel Pitts|TRIBE and Seattle choreographer Jade Solomon Curtis. Each choreographer is invited into the world of Williams鈥 exploration at the intersection of technology and race, exploitation and mystical anarchy, where hackers are artists and activists.
Tickets $28 |

April 3, 4:00 PM |Zoom
Trace the story of 19th- and 20th-century Russian Jews who left the Pale of Settlement, crossed the Black Sea and arrived in Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul), all in the twilight years of the Russian and Ottoman Empires, during this talk with historian and Stroum Center for Jewish Studies鈥 Associate Director, Sarah Zaides Rosen.
This talk will introduce listeners not only to a fascinating Jewish community where Sephardic Jews were the majority (and Ashkenazi Jews the minority), but also to the ways Sephardic Jews responded to a refugee crisis, and in turn how they contended with contemporary political ideas, including Zionism.
Centered on the book 鈥淭evye鈥檚 Ottoman Daughter: Ashkenazi and Sephardi Jews at the End of Empire鈥, Sarah will discuss Jewish identity in the late Ottoman world, and the ways in which Zionism was being debated and interpreted in the late Ottoman context.
Free | More info.

April 11-18 | Kane Hall
This tri-campus Teaching & Learning Symposium showcases the UW鈥檚 vibrant teaching community and 91探花instructors鈥 new and exciting work in the classroom.
The theme of this year鈥檚 symposium is 鈥淪ustainable Teaching.鈥 The concept of sustainability has the potential to inform our teaching in exciting ways. It might lead us toward practices that better support the well-being of students and instructors. It might focus our efforts on strategies that sustain student interest and make learning 鈥渟tick.鈥 Or we might use the concept to explore green practices that reduce the impact our teaching has on the planet.
Free |
Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Lauren Zondag (zondagld@uw.edu).